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Is the Super Bowl Culture?


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What is Culture? by Richard Law and Eric Miraglia
 

Writing Assignment: How do you define culture?

This assignment will help you to construct your own understanding of material that you're learning. Begin by reading the What is Culture? module carefully and weighing all the separate notions of culture presented there. As you examine these notions, evaluate them carefully. Write down what you believe to be their strengths and weaknesses (but you don't need to submit these notes). Also, review the paragraph below on Complex Definitions before you begin to write the assignment.

Complex Definitions

One of the most fundamental skills for you to learn in college is how to think in definitions. For the most part, thinking in definitions involves committing yourself to only the most important aspects of a term or concept. This will be your baseline definition; you always need a short, working definition on which to build your understanding of a concept and its complex relationships with other concepts. For instance, if you were to define philosophy, you could easily produce pages and pages of a definition. You need, however, to distill those pages and pages into a single sentence or two. What would it be? If you were to define philosophy, what's its most important characteristic? What single sentence definition would be able to describe everything you might say about philosophy? That is your beginning definition, the one that you commit yourself to knowing by heart.

However, you can't take complex ideas and walk around understanding them only in their most simple form: that's simplistic or reductionist thinking. Concepts such as "philosophy," "culture," "science," "the self," "freedom," "subjectivity," and so on, are extremely complex concepts. They are applied to a variety of phenomena and the meanings of these concepts change when they are applied to different phenomena. Let me give you a simple instance: the term "culture" means something different when you apply it first to an opera and then apply it to a hunting-gathering tribe in New Guinea and then apply it to bacteria on a petri dish ("culturing"). So the concept changes radically as you apply it to different phenomena.
Not only that, the concept changes as you move from speaker to speaker. One person's definition of "culture" will be different from another person's. This is especially true between cultures: a concept that you define one way may be defined completely differently within another culture. Not only that, within your own culture, concepts change radically over time. For instance, when an ancient Roman talked about "freedom," she or he meant something absolutely and completely different than the concept Martin Luther, the German theologian, was discussing when he talked about "freedom" in the 16th century. The contemporary American notion of "freedom," which is derived from Luther's, is not even close to what Luther had in mind. In fact, it's not even close to what the American rebels thought freedom was when they put it in the Declaration of Independence. Complex concepts, then, involve several different factors:

Your job as a student is to use complex concepts across a diversity of meanings. You need to recognize, for instance, that the word "freedom" does not mean one thing, but many things, and all those things are "freedom" even if they don't appear to be such to you. So, in part, your understanding of complex concepts is an evolutionary process, that is, you will through your career as a student and throughout your lifetime learn more and more ways of understanding these concepts and integrate these into your own understanding of the concept.

For this assignment you will use Speakeasy Café, a program that allows you to discuss ideas in World Civilizations with other students, past and present. You should begin by reading several of the responses to this assignment by other participants in the class.

Your internet essay will consist of two parts:

  • Apply your definition of culture to a cultural phenomenon that you are familiar with (e.g. the Super Bowl, Michael Jordan, Olympic National Park, "E.R.", Monster Trucks, Martha Stewart, barbecued ribs, Santa Claus). In this part of the essay, you will interpret the phenomenon using your definition of culture. The application of your definition to a cultural phenomenon will comprise the second part (1-2 paragraphs) of your essay.
  • Grading

    This assignment asks you to link a complex definition with the application or use of that definition. Your job in the first part of the essay is to make decisions about a complex subject by choosing among different and contrary definitions and discussions. The second part of the essay is about applying your decision to a specific problem. You will be graded based on how well you unify your essay, that is, how well you employ the definition you develop in the first part of your essay to its application in the second part. The ideal response will clearly base your interpretation of the cultural phenomenon upon your definition of culture.
     

    You should submit your assignment
    using
    The Speakeasy Café
    at http://morrison.wsu.edu/studio/


    World Cultures

    ©1996, Richard Hooker

    For information contact: Richard Hines
    Updated 6-6-1999